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Student newSpaper of the univerSity of Southern California SinCe 1912 | www.dailytrojan.com | vol. 180, no. 4 | thursday august 29, 2013
InDEX 4 · Opinion 7 · Lifestyle 12 · Classifieds 13 · Crossword 16 · Sports
Football food: four recipes to
cook for the game. PAGE 7
Kickoff: trojans travel to hawaii
for their first game. PAGE 16
hoSpitality
By david Kim and isaBella
sayyah
daily trojan
The Trojan Farmers’ Market,
a weekly event beginning this
year, debuted on McCarthy Quad
Wednesday.
The farmers’ market, which
took place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
welcomed vendors from produce
to artisan soaps.
The market is a joint
undertaking by USC Hospitality
and Undergraduate Student
Government. They hope that it
will become a convenient place
Quad hosts
farmers’
market
The first weekly farmers’
market is poised to become a
new way for students to shop.
| see mArkEt, page 4 |
uracha chaiyapinunt | Daily Trojan
Healthy living · Ariana Shives, a freshman majoring in mechanical engineering, examines some fresh
radishes at a booth during the first weekly Trojan Farmers’ Market on McCarthy Quad in Wednesday.
SCienCe
By Betty Bong
daily trojan
The National Inventors Hall of
Fame and the History Channel’s
Modern Marvels program has
named Professor Behrokh
Khoshnevis research as one of the
top 25 best inventions of 2006.
Khoshnevis, a professor in USC’s
Viterbi School of Engineering
presented his work in Washington
D.C. on July 23, NASA’s annual
Technology Day.
Khoshnevis’ research is
based on his invention of the
groundbreaking automated
construction method called
“Contour Crafting,” which creates
large scale structures layer by
layer, similar to that of the process
of 3-D Printing.
For his work with NASA,
Khoshnevis tailored the process
of “Contour Crafting” for
extraterrestrial applications.
“I was looking at areas where my
technology could be used besides
the applications in building
construction,” Khoshnevis said. “I
thought about construction on the
moon or on Mars, and I noticed
that primarily, everything is based
on taking stuff from Earth.”
Khoshnevis, in collaboration
with NASA, is developing landing
pads for the moon and Mars.
“So far, everything that has
landed on the moon and Mars
has landed on soft soil, and that
is pretty dangerous... You need a
flat surface which is also strong,
which is also capable of handling
high temperature of the exhaust
fumes.”
If successful, Professor
Khoshnevis’ endeavors could vault
USC onto the global stage.
“Professor Khoshnevis’
research really establishes USC as
a global community, and I think
many students will be inspired by
his passion to further pursue their
own goals,” said Ying Ying Lei, a
sophomore majoring in electrical
engineering.
Brian Weiniger, a junior
majoring in astronautical
engineering, also praised
Khoshnevis’ research.
“Colonizing the moon can be
done in many ways. Rather than
sending rockets to build lunar
outposts piece by piece, this new
technology holds the capability
to build everything on the moon
while using materials that are
already there,” Weiniger said. “It
goes to show how brilliant the
professors are at USC. Having
role models like Khoshnevis teach
at our school is inspiring for
students to push the envelope and
create the ideas that will mold our
future.”
Khoshnevis teaches both
industrial and systems
engineering, and civil and
environmental engineering
classes, and is the director of
the Center for Rapid Automated
Fabrication Technologies, as well
as the Manufacturing Engineering
Graduate Program at USC. His
work, however, is not limited to
the field of engineering.
“There are a lot of students
sending me emails who want
to be a part of the technology
development,” Khoshnevis
said. “There are students from
architecture, engineering,
business school, even social
sciences and the arts. There is a
sense that we are on the edge of
something that could change the
face of civilization.”
While his research has already
achieved significant results,
Khoshnevis has even loftier
expectations for it.
“What I basically envision and
hope is that one [of] the most
major technologies that will have
a very significant impact on the
well-being of the whole population
is about to emerge out of this
activity,” he said.
Viterbi professor featured by NASA
Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis was honored by NASA for
his work developing landing pads for the moon and Mars.
Photo courtesy of usc viterbi school of engineering
Out of this world · As well as teaching, Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis
also serves as a Felllow member of the Institute of Industrial Engineering.
faCulty
By selena ng
daily trojan
Brooklyn-based composers
Andrew Norman and Ted Hearne
are joining the faculty of USC
Thornton School of Music. Both will
become full-time professors, with
Norman starting this semester and
Hearne in the fall semester of 2014.
Norman, a Thornton alumnus,
was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize
in music for “The Companion
Guide to Rome,” a piece inspired
by the year he spent living in the
Italian city. Currently, Norman is
composing a piano concerto for the
Los Angeles Philharmonic.
The 30-year-old has also
worked as the Los Angeles
Chamber Orchestra’s composer-in-
residence. Norman will teach
a part-time course load this
fall due to prior commitments,
including Composition I. Students
from Thornton said they already
look forward to taking Norman’s
classes.
“I will actually be studying
composition with Norman this
year — a successful, contemporary
composer who has been
commissioned to write works
for a gamut of well-known music
Broadway
alumni to
teach at ’SC
Composers Andrew Norman and
Ted Hearne will begin teaching at
USC’s Thornton School of Music.
| see fAculty, page 3 |
aCademiCS
| see busInEss, page 3 |
By eric wendorf
daily trojan
This fall marks the first semester
of the World Bachelor’s in Business
(WBB) program, a new major in
the Marshall School of Business
that allows freshmen to travel to
three continents over a period of
four years, and earn degrees from
universities in Milan and Hong
Kong as well as USC.
The program is a partnership
between USC, Bocconi University
in Milan and the Hong Kong School
of Science and Technology.
“WBB represents a unique
approach to undergraduate
Students to
study across
continents
Freshmen in the World
Bachelor’s in Business program
will study at three universities.

Student newSpaper of the univerSity of Southern California SinCe 1912 | www.dailytrojan.com | vol. 180, no. 4 | thursday august 29, 2013
InDEX 4 · Opinion 7 · Lifestyle 12 · Classifieds 13 · Crossword 16 · Sports
Football food: four recipes to
cook for the game. PAGE 7
Kickoff: trojans travel to hawaii
for their first game. PAGE 16
hoSpitality
By david Kim and isaBella
sayyah
daily trojan
The Trojan Farmers’ Market,
a weekly event beginning this
year, debuted on McCarthy Quad
Wednesday.
The farmers’ market, which
took place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
welcomed vendors from produce
to artisan soaps.
The market is a joint
undertaking by USC Hospitality
and Undergraduate Student
Government. They hope that it
will become a convenient place
Quad hosts
farmers’
market
The first weekly farmers’
market is poised to become a
new way for students to shop.
| see mArkEt, page 4 |
uracha chaiyapinunt | Daily Trojan
Healthy living · Ariana Shives, a freshman majoring in mechanical engineering, examines some fresh
radishes at a booth during the first weekly Trojan Farmers’ Market on McCarthy Quad in Wednesday.
SCienCe
By Betty Bong
daily trojan
The National Inventors Hall of
Fame and the History Channel’s
Modern Marvels program has
named Professor Behrokh
Khoshnevis research as one of the
top 25 best inventions of 2006.
Khoshnevis, a professor in USC’s
Viterbi School of Engineering
presented his work in Washington
D.C. on July 23, NASA’s annual
Technology Day.
Khoshnevis’ research is
based on his invention of the
groundbreaking automated
construction method called
“Contour Crafting,” which creates
large scale structures layer by
layer, similar to that of the process
of 3-D Printing.
For his work with NASA,
Khoshnevis tailored the process
of “Contour Crafting” for
extraterrestrial applications.
“I was looking at areas where my
technology could be used besides
the applications in building
construction,” Khoshnevis said. “I
thought about construction on the
moon or on Mars, and I noticed
that primarily, everything is based
on taking stuff from Earth.”
Khoshnevis, in collaboration
with NASA, is developing landing
pads for the moon and Mars.
“So far, everything that has
landed on the moon and Mars
has landed on soft soil, and that
is pretty dangerous... You need a
flat surface which is also strong,
which is also capable of handling
high temperature of the exhaust
fumes.”
If successful, Professor
Khoshnevis’ endeavors could vault
USC onto the global stage.
“Professor Khoshnevis’
research really establishes USC as
a global community, and I think
many students will be inspired by
his passion to further pursue their
own goals,” said Ying Ying Lei, a
sophomore majoring in electrical
engineering.
Brian Weiniger, a junior
majoring in astronautical
engineering, also praised
Khoshnevis’ research.
“Colonizing the moon can be
done in many ways. Rather than
sending rockets to build lunar
outposts piece by piece, this new
technology holds the capability
to build everything on the moon
while using materials that are
already there,” Weiniger said. “It
goes to show how brilliant the
professors are at USC. Having
role models like Khoshnevis teach
at our school is inspiring for
students to push the envelope and
create the ideas that will mold our
future.”
Khoshnevis teaches both
industrial and systems
engineering, and civil and
environmental engineering
classes, and is the director of
the Center for Rapid Automated
Fabrication Technologies, as well
as the Manufacturing Engineering
Graduate Program at USC. His
work, however, is not limited to
the field of engineering.
“There are a lot of students
sending me emails who want
to be a part of the technology
development,” Khoshnevis
said. “There are students from
architecture, engineering,
business school, even social
sciences and the arts. There is a
sense that we are on the edge of
something that could change the
face of civilization.”
While his research has already
achieved significant results,
Khoshnevis has even loftier
expectations for it.
“What I basically envision and
hope is that one [of] the most
major technologies that will have
a very significant impact on the
well-being of the whole population
is about to emerge out of this
activity,” he said.
Viterbi professor featured by NASA
Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis was honored by NASA for
his work developing landing pads for the moon and Mars.
Photo courtesy of usc viterbi school of engineering
Out of this world · As well as teaching, Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis
also serves as a Felllow member of the Institute of Industrial Engineering.
faCulty
By selena ng
daily trojan
Brooklyn-based composers
Andrew Norman and Ted Hearne
are joining the faculty of USC
Thornton School of Music. Both will
become full-time professors, with
Norman starting this semester and
Hearne in the fall semester of 2014.
Norman, a Thornton alumnus,
was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize
in music for “The Companion
Guide to Rome,” a piece inspired
by the year he spent living in the
Italian city. Currently, Norman is
composing a piano concerto for the
Los Angeles Philharmonic.
The 30-year-old has also
worked as the Los Angeles
Chamber Orchestra’s composer-in-
residence. Norman will teach
a part-time course load this
fall due to prior commitments,
including Composition I. Students
from Thornton said they already
look forward to taking Norman’s
classes.
“I will actually be studying
composition with Norman this
year — a successful, contemporary
composer who has been
commissioned to write works
for a gamut of well-known music
Broadway
alumni to
teach at ’SC
Composers Andrew Norman and
Ted Hearne will begin teaching at
USC’s Thornton School of Music.
| see fAculty, page 3 |
aCademiCS
| see busInEss, page 3 |
By eric wendorf
daily trojan
This fall marks the first semester
of the World Bachelor’s in Business
(WBB) program, a new major in
the Marshall School of Business
that allows freshmen to travel to
three continents over a period of
four years, and earn degrees from
universities in Milan and Hong
Kong as well as USC.
The program is a partnership
between USC, Bocconi University
in Milan and the Hong Kong School
of Science and Technology.
“WBB represents a unique
approach to undergraduate
Students to
study across
continents
Freshmen in the World
Bachelor’s in Business program
will study at three universities.